| ProfileParadigm ShiftPhotosBlogLists | Help |
|
August 25 Denny CreekToday, Search had a morale event. We went to Denny Creek east on I90. There were trail snacks (jerky, water). The hike was fine, 5.5 miles. We went under I90 which was raised several hundred feed in the air, and then went to a flat rock plateau where we paused for a bit. Then we went on the second part which was supposed to be harder (we didn't know it was the 2nd part until near the end) After several miles and some decent switchbacks we arrived at the lake and chilled there for a bit. We headed back to the bus, and from there to Red West.
Check the pictures under Denny Creek! August 14 Jetty IslandJetty Island
Dinner @ tosoni's. For me, sharing apps of crispy flash-fried mushrooms and calamari steaks, main course of porkchops with apricot demi-glaze and dessert of fruit-covered sponge cake. Very high quality food, though the service was not that great (poorly paced, inattentive service, poor info)... Talking about My houseThis is the location of My house(on the corner, it blends in with everything else) August 13 get together, R KellyLast night we went to Helen's place for a get together. It was half a dance party, half a Beirut venue. Learned new some exercises, danced a bit, took photos, had some drinks, and just chilled. Their place was nice and spacious. I'll link to some of the photos if I see them again.
Perhaps one of the cooler things was watching 5 of the 12 installments of R Kelly's music video/soap opera Coming out of the Closet. R Kelly sings the soap opera involving a lot of trust, affairs, relationships, and events. He is doing some form-defining experiments there, crafting the music video into a narrative. This was one of the most engaging crossovers between music, movie, and TV I have seen. I hope that this becomes a trend in the media industry. Jetty IslandLater today, I will go to Jetty Island on Puget Sound to chill on the beach, do some reading, chill there. I miss how the sand remains after a beach trip is over and symphonic discord of the waves. I finally have flip flops.
Hoping the water is warm and the sun beats down. weight liftingI really need to create a regimen of exercise at school and follow it. I came across an interesting overview of factors contributing to why people lose focus in the middle of exercise regimes: <a href="http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-9219/exercise.htm">Exercise Adherence</a>
August 07 Pro ClubI went to the Pro Club today. i went yesterday and i will go tomorrow. This health club is a great experience and is a definite plus to the internship. So far, I've been going almost every morning before work. Even though I am not pushing myself, I feel better and I'm becoming slightly more conditioned. I hope that I can continue my gym adventures at the MAC next year. I just need a partner to go with on a regular basis and I will be fine.
I might as well be a Pro Club evangelist August 06 Wild GingerTonight we went to Wild Ginger, a Seattle downtown Asian fusion restaurant. Unfortunately, I had partially spoiled my appetite before I arrived, having food at my team's biweekly beer bash. The restaurant was immense--maybe four or so disparate seating areas. The satay-bar was decent: I ordered the lamb satay with peanut sauce which was exquisitely spiced and moist inside. The peanut sauce was good, but nothing unique. My main course was a 7 flavor beef, which wasn't as tasty as I had hoped for. We shared a few dishes family style, which I only partially partook in: the only thing that was unique was the Peking duck (especially because they had extracted the fat which often ruins the flavor of the sandwiches). Dessert was ginger ice cream, which I liked mainly because I have an appetite for 'weird' ice cream flavors (i.e. my favorite ice cream ever has been the home-made mint & hot pepper ice cream at the Taj West End in Bangalore). We were seated near an artery for waiters and waitresses: food was bussed next to our table to be delivered to the section. The area immediately next to our table was a holding area for dirty dishes before they were returned to the kitchen. It was also quite a noisy place, not relaxing or intimate like Brasa, Tosoni's or Campagne.
Afterwards we went back to Pat's and Chrix's place to watch Anchorman, which I slept through because I was worn from the gym this morning and I had never been a big fan of the movie. (it seemed like a movie that was more fun to make than to watch). I'm going to bed now to hopefully go to the gym tomorrow morning. I will probably work in the office as well as I finish the presentation of something. A Review of a Long Way Down![]() Nick Hornby's newest book A Long Way Down is tedious a long way through. He employs the plot device of having 4 narrators come together as they ponder jumping to their death and switches through their voices as they ponder their own lives and also others' lives in this group. However the characters are caricatures in some regards, such as the rambunctious teen who offends most of the time and feels bad about it repeatedly and the disgraced TV talk show host who is uncaring throughout the book. However, it's not that these characters are boring, it's that Hornby takes a superficial approach to analyzing them. The characters only discuss their actions on the surface and rarely follows up on the inner workings to why they are (for one rare example, consider JJ, the american small-time rock-obsessed musician, who realizes that his association of intellectualism and literature is motivated by rebellion against his uneducated parents)
Overall, I found it hard to get through. I much prefer the authenticity of the voice in 'Fever Pitch'. I still will check out 'How to be Good' or 'Like a Boy'. August 04 Pink Door
I ate here for my MS interview. They had a killer spinach lasagna and solid oysters. The place was fun, but it was a bummer eating along. The live jazz was a bonus. Food: 7 Decor: 7 Service: 6 My Virtual Earth Scratch Pad April 11 Long Time Coming 2Now is my chance to update on my second expedition last weekend. I went to Paris on account of HMCE (Harvard Model Congress Europe--kind of like Model UN, but Congress). The conference was held in a hotel on the outskirts of Paris. There were 308 students from France (maybe half), Switzerland, Greece, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, and Canada. I REALLY enjoyed the diversity there and it is interesting to see how people react, as this for many of the delegates will constitute their first impressions of people from these countries. I think I prefer it only with non-native english speakers (i.e. not the Canadian school) because as my friends in Budapest tell me, it is much more difficult to understand a native English speaker than someone who is learning/has learned English as an additional language. Last year, I along with 6 others rented out this multimillion dollar villa in Sitges, a posh Barcelona suburb. It was really relaxing and I enjoyed Barcelona a lot. The villa was decked out and it was a nice relaxant before the conference which also proved to be fun. This year I only would go to the conference and hesitated whether I would enjoy it as much. I did enjoy it, if not more. Primarily, I really enjoyed seeing Harvard people. They have a demeanor and manner of acting (if I may stereotype) that I really enjoy. Although interactions can be fake, I believe it is more pleasant to live in the illusion that you are better friends with someone than you really are. However, I did form several friendships with staffers I had never met before, and also hung out with several of my old friends. I am very likely to do HMC/HMCE next year. The conference went really well on substantive matters. Well organized and thought out, everything ran smoothly until completion. I cochaired World Trade Organization with Dele. Although I had been initially skeptical that there would be no focus to the debate, it went really well. All of our 19 delegates participated once, and at least 10 of them were active participants. Students worked together and their inability to resolve issues was very true to life (i.e. the failed ministerial conference in Cancun of 2003). People definitely formed friendships and we produced many agreements on the three topics (IPR, Ag Subsidies, and Accession of LDCs) which became integrated into one larger agreement. I enjoyed it so much, I might consider for applying for WTO next year. As for Paris, it was a lot of fun. Thursday night we went out to a bar and I drank a little too much and ended up spending a while throwing it all up (although I blame Air France for not serving a meal when they said they would). Friday morning, while people were cleaning out the apartment (meant for 4, but had 13 people sleeping there that night) I ventured out to the Luxembourg Gardens, which were spectacular. The weather was perfect and the gardens were well kept. Also, I went to Musee D'Orsay which was an extremely comprehensive museum on impressionist art and is housed beautifully in a converted railroad station. I also took a riverboat cruise that day along the Seine. The most tourist thing to do, but it was fun and I saw a lot of sights. Friday night HMCE took us to a wine tasting, which was informative and had 3 good wines (1 was from Bordeaux, and I can't remember where the other two were). After that had good French food while sitting outside. Saturday night: Ventured to find a Haitian restaurant that WEi-Chen raved about. Located near Montmartre, it was totally empty when we got there. We ordered impromptu prix fixe dinners for 10 euro. It consisted of 3 fried plaintains, 2 circular cuts of beef 2 inches in diameter and a lot of rice. The worst part was that they only had one maybe two stoves so that they had to cook the same meal 13 times and bring it out one by one. I finished eating 30 minutes before the last person got their food. It may have been the most disappointing restaurant experience ever. Everyone agreed. We found out that the Pope died during that meal. Sunday: Met up with David, a guy from Paris who was also an intern at Infosys this past summer. He was one of 5-6 interns that I got along with and hung out with. Cool, intelligent guy. We went for sushi near the Edgar Quinet metro stop. While I was initially surprised by the lack of japanois food, this area reversed my opinion. There were tons of japanese and korean restaurants within a really small area. Regardless the place we went to was cool and cheap. 5 pcs of sushi nigiri, 5 brochettes (kebabs), soup, salad, and tea for 13,5 euro. On Monday, I would have had like 5 hours of free time, but got a late start because I was quasi-waiting for other people. We went to Centre Pompidou, the giant contemporary arts complex. The architecture was extremely postmodern and modeled after a sewage processing plant (think giant tubes going along the exterior of the building where people walk through) [ Pic of Exterior ] There was an exhibit called Dionysiac which had giant room-sized exhibits emblematic of the dionysiac ethic (Affirm life with loud, colorful, unusual pieces.) Of the 12 pieces on display, 1 was had an enclosed subroom within the room. Turns out, the artist held a rock concert in this room with two bands and then after it was over and people had left, he froze the entire room with a powerful A/C. People's garbage and the musical equipment etc. would be frozen in place (maybe to represent that exhilirating moments in time ought to be preserved not forgotten). I must have misread the signs, but I thought we could go in. So I opened the hermetically sealed door and went inside to look around (it was cold, maybe -20F, brrr!). When I came out, the curator acted as if I was not meant to go inside and chided me shortly. I was mortified, haha good that I was alone. After that, I went to the airport and caught my flight home, which thankfully did serve me a meal. All in all, I loved Paris this time around and had a great time at HMCE. April 09 PsychoMy flatmate has been acting really weird lately. All semester, I've been offering him opportunities to hang out with me, but he always wants to do math and stay in. He asked me a month ago if his parents could stay in our flat when they visited him. A week later he told me they weren't coming. Two days ago, he mentions it and acts like I've known the whole time. I think it is weird that they are staying here, but I find it weirder he is so evasive about it. 3 days ago I came back and there was another kid from our program in the flat. As they walk out the kid says "I think I'm borrowing your shorts" even though he was not wearing my shorts. Before I had time to correct him, my flatmate signaled me to play along. Apparently, he wanted to get rid of him and said that he didn't have any shorts to lend. When the kid did find one of his, he said it was mine. Whatever, but it was lame to lie and worse to bring me in on it. This morning I go into the kitchen to find a note reading: "The kitchen was bullshit. If I have to clean up after you, don't use the kitchen" This made me furious. Okay, so I am not anal-retentive as he about cleanliness, but I do clean my dishes, even before I eat my food! Yesterday, I was late to meet people so I did a rush job on two of my dishes and left them in the sink [I only made plain pasta!]. This infuriated me. He also left his half of the utilities on the counter, but he was short 250. I made a note on the paper that he was short that much, since it is easy to divide that into half and we use it equally. I come home to find 250 forints in 1, 2, 5 and 10 forint denominations. There were lik 20 1-forint coints (about half a cent!). This pissed me off even more. Just be normal and give it to me in respectable denominations! I don't know whether I'm pissed at his actual actions or just this holier-than-thou attitude that he has had much of the time, but I've ignored it in the interest of preserving harmony in the flat. I am not going to make a big deal out of this, although I am going to ask for 250 in 50, 100, or 200 denominations. Whatever--at least now I know why people like to vent on their blogs. Long Time Coming 1As expected, I lapesed on blog entries. Here is one of a series of updates Don't forget to check out the pictures. March 18 LatelyIts been a while since I've posted. I've been decent. Most nights lately I've been going out to a bar and club and drinking a few beers. I think my tolerance for beer is rising although I am still not a big drinker. I have definitely been having a lot of fun here lately as I've been haningout with some really cool people and slowly meeting more Americans in the program. On Monday I went to a town called Szentendre which is an artists colony 20km north of BP. It was nice and quaint, but somewhat touristy. We went to a really nice French restaurant and waited forever for really delicious food. I've slowly been losing command of the English language. Between math classes and talking to people who learned English as a second (sometimes third or fourth!) language, I am never really pressed to speak eloquently or think of more complicated Latin-derived words. I've forgotten so much in Hebrew that it is embarassing. Whenever I try to think of a Hebrew word I think of a Hungarian word. My Hungarian is improving but I still can not speak that well. I can be somewhat decent at reading (easy) sentences. We just learned relative clauses in Hungarian class, which is somewhat counter intuitive. I had a Galois theory midterm this morning. I didn't get motivated for it and left early even though I knew I had wrong answers. Getting 5/7 questions is an A - I answered 6 with errors on at least two. I am not really concerned about grades that much. I think as long as I get B-range grades or higher, I will pass. I'm also taking 5 classes when I will only get credit for four. I can drop at any time and will drop my worst class before finals. Because of spring break rescheduling I have a Hungarian history midterm Saturday morning at 8:30AM. I leave for Russia the following morning. Later today I will get my passport. I am spending three nights in Moscow and three nights in St. Petersburg. There seems to be plenty to do there. I am quite excited.
March 17 Talking about Telegraph | News | Boateng will step down to take on South Africa roleI found something amusing about the photo. The caption uses "Friends in high places" to mean Michael Jackson, currently on trial for molesting a teenager, and David Blaine, the extreme magician. If these are the kinds of people this politician chills with, he must have some other interesting friends. Quote Telegraph | News | Boateng will step down to take on South Africa role March 08 Requirements DownAs I was bored in class, I started writing down all the classes I'd taken in the margin and figuring how many requirements I have yet to complete. Today for the first time, I discovered that I am all done. I have finished my 12 math courses (after this semester) and have done my necessary 4 cores (7 - 1 study abroad - 2 AB/AM = 4 cores). On top of all that, I have done 2 of my required 8 classes for Stats. So 6 more to go and then I'm done. I'm glad I don't have to worry about a core in the fall. March 06 Math Parties; PecsMath Parties or How I Learned to Stop Going to Them and Love Other Activities Pecs Anyway, Pecs was really beautiful. However, on Sunday nearly everything was closed! I walked up and down the famed shopping street there only to find the occasional pub open. All the museums were closed too! except the Marzipan museum which had some pretty cool things made from marzipan, including the smurf set up and the cactus garden (see attached pictures). After that, I walked some more on some sidestreets and settled into a coffeehouse which had a ton of quality coffees and teas for sale. I just chilled there and read (Vanity Fair by Thackeray--my current project). The place was very small but it had an awesome atmosphere enhanced by Cuban rap playing in the background. For some reason, they laughed when I asked for the name of the artist. After that I found the city mall, which I spent about two hours in before my train left at 6:30. All in all it was a nice day. The city had some really unique architecture and had many quaint churches. The architecture was really interesting; there were Turkish elements in some of the structures; many buildings had bright pastel facades (pink, yellow); and some of the buildings had Zsolnay tilings on their roof, which is one of the crafts Hungary is known for. Check out the pictures in the Pecs album on the blog. March 04 Spring Break; NordenSpring Break Nordic Conference going to head to Tesco, the Wal-Mart equivalent here for some cheap shopping. March 02 Having Fun; Scammers; Domestic AbuseMy First All Nighter Lesson: Don't take food suggestions from obese Hungarians who don't speak a word of English in random restaurants. Two nights ago I went to a local restaurant to try it because it seemed decent. However, a few tables were primarily Anglophone and they only had one English-speaking waiter. Another came over to me. I asked him what something was (it was called 'Gundel' style) and he pointed to the other waiter. As I was a bit hungry, I asked in Hungarian whether it was good. He nodded, made an emphatic hand gesture where his thumb touched his index finger with the other fingers extended, and said something like very tasty. At that point, his trifecta of gestures in support of the dish coaxed me to ordering it. It actually was a massively fried chicken breast with a mountain cauliflower and cheese and egg on top. It did not go down well, and there were like 4 inches of cauliflower on top of a quarter inch thick chicken breast. Conversation between me and two (presumably) street hustlers Legalized Domestic Abuse in Hungary February 28 Spring Break PlansI'm deciding between two things to do for my Spring Break: 1:Budapest>Ljublana(1)>Venice(2)>Florence(2)>Rome(3)>Milan(1)>Vienna(1)>Budapest I'm 75% leaning towards the Russian adventure. It requires getting a tourist visa which is more annoying than hard. I'll decide by tomorrow but on the Russian trip I will be with people [1 of whom is fluent] while on the Italian trip I would probably end up going alone. I'll also be less rushed and more relaxed if I focus on like 2-3 cities versus 5-6. I only like had time to tour Paris for like 8 hours total last spring and came away with a negative impressions, presumably because I didn't get to do anything, while I loved Barcelona where I spent 5 or so days. The week after I come back I head to Paris for HMCE. I forgot my suit in the US and need to find a cheap suit I can wear just for the conference. |
||||||||||||||||
|
|